I was never able to get a satisfactory picture of my signature weapon, the Avalon, when I was in Georgia, but now that I'm back in New England I was able to get a smashing picture of it. The emulsiphanium vial isn't attached because I haven't gotten it out of packing yet but screw it, still looks great. ^_^ I'm happy to finally be able to show it to you in its most accurate form.

Very interesting combination of different guns here. I can tell right off the bat that you used a Hunter for the base. And I like the use of the double-shot buzzbee shotgun. The only one I'm slightly worried about is the fact that it looks like you used the cocking mechanism from the air zone shell shock blaster (although I know it goes under various names), I'm a fan of that gun and I just hope you put the other pieces of it to good use as well. (and I'm sure you did) Anwyay, very nice work.

I'm impressed, all of your source calls are correct- though to be fair I didn't do enough sculpting to have intentionally hidden most of them. The Shell Shock in question was, by the time of construction, about 1 or 2 years old and had already existed as one other apparently unsellable gun (La Arma de Aurelliano Batalla) and, as per my general method of parts-getting, after about a year of sale-less-ness, it was broken down. Once disassembled, parts of it went all over the place; here, as various accents on the AMR-B15 District 9 inspired rifle, onto a commission I'm still working on called the Shiranui, and of course into my parts bin for whatever future use. I tend to waste nothing if I break down a weapon, since I paid for it and put the work into it. Thank you for your careful asessment and interest.

Why do you think I catalogue everything in photo, video, and writeup form? The way I look at it, the fact that it was made is the beautiful part. The actual item, fun to display, but not the point. I mean, I make most of it out of trash anyway, and it stays there until it's part of a new gun. "From whence it came, it shall remain, until it is complete again".